A sociologist studies human interaction. This interaction presupposes at least two people, but the reality is usually more complex. Sociologists investigate how group context influences interaction and social action. They look for patterns and mechanisms, they look at the cohesion and interaction between groups, in addition to social movements and changes.

Dutch

Faculty of Political and Social Sciences

3 years – 180 credits

Bachelor's Programme

What will you study?

Based on the premise that people live together, sociology wants to understand and explain human behaviour: what do we do, think and feel? While a biologist looks closely at the physical aspects, and a psychologist studies the functioning of the brain, a sociologist focuses on society and the relationship between people and society. Who we are and what we do is perhaps most particularly determined by our relationships with others. These relationships can either be personal  (e.g. the influence of parents on their children), or social, i.e. between groups of people with the same characteristics (e.g. age, education level, gender, ethnicity), and who share a similar position in society (e.g. the influence of stigmas on the well-being of ethnic minorities). In addition, there are large organizations such as schools, multinationals, non-profit organizations, media companies and states that determine our lives (e.g. the influence of large mining companies on the health of Peruvian farmers). Looking to understand all this, sociology is the discipline that truly focuses on the study of humans in 21st-century society.